St. John's Presbyterian in Houston

Is Presbyterian Christianity? Beliefs Explained


Let me clear something up right away. I hear this question more often than you'd think: "How is Presbyterian different from Christianity?"

Here's the simple answer: It's not.


Presbyterian isn't a different religion from Christianity. Presbyterian IS Christianity. Think of it like this: Christianity is the big family tree, and Presbyterian is one of the branches. We're not a separate faith. We're a specific way of following Jesus Christ within the larger Christian tradition.


But I understand why people get confused. Walk through Houston and you'll see Baptist churches, Catholic churches, Methodist churches, Presbyterian churches, and dozens of other varieties. It can seem like they're all different religions competing for your attention.


They're not. They're all Christians who love Jesus, read the same Bible, and believe God sent his Son to save the world. The differences come down to how we understand certain parts of the faith and how we organize our churches.


So when someone asks me how Presbyterian differs from Christianity, I usually smile and say, "We don't. We're just Presbyterian Christians instead of Baptist Christians or Catholic Christians or Methodist Christians."


Now, that doesn't mean there are no differences at all. There absolutely are. But the differences are within Christianity, not outside it. Like siblings in the same family who have different personalities but share the same DNA.


Let me walk you through what makes Presbyterian Christianity distinctive.



We're Protestant Christians With Reformed Roots


First, you need to know about the big split in Christianity that happened about 500 years ago. Before that, most Christians in Western Europe were Catholic, united under the Pope in Rome. But in the 1500s, some Christians started saying the church had drifted away from what the Bible actually taught.


These reformers (people who wanted to reform or fix the church) started what we now call the Protestant Reformation. "Protestant" just means we protested some of the Catholic Church's practices and wanted to get back to biblical basics.


Presbyterian Christians came out of that Protestant Reformation, specifically influenced by a man named John Calvin in Geneva, Switzerland. He and others like him emphasized certain biblical truths that became the foundation of what we call Reformed theology.


So when you visit St. John's Presbyterian Church in Houston, you're experiencing a form of Christianity that traces its roots back through Calvin, through the Protestant Reformation, all the way back to Jesus and the apostles. We're Christians. Just Presbyterian-flavored Christians.



What Makes Presbyterian Theology Distinct


Okay, so if we're all Christians, what makes Presbyterian theology different from other Christian groups?


We emphasize God's sovereignty. This is a big one. We believe God is completely in control of everything. Not in a fatalistic "nothing matters" way, but in a "God has a purpose and plan" way. This means we trust that our lives have meaning because they're part of God's bigger story.


A lot of other Christians believe this too, of course. But Presbyterians really stress it. When we worship on Sunday morning, everything points to God's glory and God's plan, not just our feelings or our attempts to reach up to God through our own efforts.


We believe in grace alone. Here's what this means in plain English: You can't earn your way to heaven. You can't be good enough, moral enough, or religious enough to deserve God's love. Salvation comes purely as a gift from God through faith in Jesus Christ.


Again, many Christians believe this. But Presbyterians inherited a particularly strong emphasis on grace from our Reformed roots. It shapes everything about how we approach faith. We don't worship to make God happy with us. We worship because God already loves us in Christ.

We take Scripture very seriously. Walk into a Presbyterian worship service and you'll notice we read a lot of Bible. Our sermons work through Scripture verse by verse, not just picking inspiring quotes. We believe the Bible is our primary authority for knowing God and understanding how to live.


Is this unique to Presbyterians? No. But compared to some churches that treat the Bible as one wisdom source among many, or that pick and choose verses to support whatever message they want to preach, Presbyterian churches tend to let Scripture actually drive the conversation.

At St. John's, when I preach, I'm not giving you my personal opinions with some Bible verses sprinkled in. I'm trying to explain what the text actually says and means, even when it challenges us.


We believe in the priesthood of all believers. This is a fancy way of saying there's no spiritual elite. You don't need a special priest to mediate between you and God. If you're a Christian, you have direct access to God through Jesus Christ.


This affects how we pray, how we read the Bible, and how we think about spiritual authority. Every believer can pray directly to God. Every believer can read and understand Scripture. We're all priests, in a sense.



How We Organize Our Churches


Here's where Presbyterians really stand out: church governance. I know, governance sounds boring. But stay with me, because this matters more than you might think.


The word "Presbyterian" comes from the Greek word "presbyteros," which means "elder." Our churches are governed by elders elected from the congregation. These are regular people, not some distant hierarchy of religious officials.


At St. John's, our Session (that's what we call the board of elders) includes both pastors like me and lay people elected by the congregation. We make decisions together. When something important needs deciding, we don't have a bishop tell us what to do. We gather, pray, study Scripture, and decide together.


This is different from Catholic churches, where authority flows from the Pope down through bishops to local priests. It's also different from some Protestant churches where a single pastor makes all the decisions.


We believe this representative system reflects biblical patterns and keeps power distributed rather than concentrated in one person's hands.


You know the people making decisions because they're your neighbors, the folks you see at the grocery store.


Our Two Sacraments


Christians disagree about sacraments (holy rituals that Jesus commanded). Some traditions have seven sacraments. Some don't use the word sacrament at all.


Presbyterians recognize two sacraments: baptism and the Lord's Supper (also called communion or the Eucharist).

Baptism: We baptize both adults who come to faith and infants born into Christian families. The infant baptism part surprises some people.


Here's the thinking: Just like children born into Jewish families were circumcised as a sign of God's covenant promises, we baptize children as a sign that God's grace includes them.


This doesn't mean the child is automatically saved just by getting water sprinkled on their head. It means we're claiming God's promises for this child and committing as a church community to raise them in the faith. When they're old enough, they'll need to personally confirm their faith.


We don't believe you have to be fully immersed underwater to be properly baptized, though some Presbyterian churches do offer that option.


What matters is the water and God's promise, not the exact method.


The Lord's Supper: When we celebrate communion at St. John's, we practice what's called "open table." This means if you trust in Jesus Christ, you're welcome to participate, regardless of whether you're Presbyterian or not. You don't have to be a member of our church.

Some Christian traditions restrict communion to only their members. Others see it as a purely symbolic memorial meal. Presbyterians believe Christ is really present when we share bread and wine (or grape juice), but we're not saying the bread literally becomes Jesus' body like Catholics teach. It's a spiritual presence, a means of grace.


How Presbyterian Worship Feels Different


If you've visited different churches in Houston, you've probably noticed huge variety in worship styles. Walk into a megachurch and you might see a full band, stage lighting, fog machines. Visit a Catholic mass and you'll experience formal liturgy with a priest in robes. Drop by a Pentecostal service and you might encounter speaking in tongues and extended periods of spontaneous prayer.


Presbyterian worship falls somewhere in the middle of that spectrum. We're not casual and contemporary, but we're not highly formal either.


We follow a structured order of worship, but there's room for warmth and spontaneity within that structure.


At St. John's, a typical Sunday service includes:

  • A call to worship (reminding us why we've gathered)
  • Hymns and songs (both traditional and more contemporary)
  • Prayer of confession (honestly acknowledging our failures)
  • Assurance of pardon (hearing God's forgiveness declared)
  • Scripture readings (usually from both Old and New Testaments)
  • The sermon (explaining and applying biblical truth)
  • Prayers for our community and world
  • An offering (giving back to God from what we've received)
  • A benediction (blessing as we're sent out to serve)


This structure tells a story. God calls us. We respond. We confess our need. God meets us with grace. God speaks through Scripture. We offer ourselves back to God. God sends us out renewed.


Some people find this structure comforting. Others initially find it unfamiliar. But give it a few Sundays and most people discover something:


The structure frees you to actually worship instead of wondering what's coming next. You can focus on God instead of the program.


We sing hymns that have sustained Christians for generations. We're not against newer songs, but we believe there's wisdom in the old hymns. They teach theology while we sing. They connect us to believers across centuries.


We preach sermons that work through Scripture systematically. Over the course of months, we might work through an entire book of the Bible, examining it passage by passage. This prevents cherry-picking favorite verses and forces us to grapple with difficult texts.


Presbyterian Faith in Action


Here's something I love about Presbyterian Christianity: It doesn't let you separate faith from action. Yes, we care about correct theology. Yes, we value thoughtful Bible study. But our faith always points outward toward service.


At St. John's, we partner with Braes Interfaith Ministries to serve Houston families in need. We maintain a community garden that feeds hungry people. We support Presbyterian Children's Homes and Services. These aren't separate from our worship. They flow directly from it.

Presbyterian theology teaches that the God who created everything cares about justice, mercy, and compassion. If we're going to follow Jesus, we can't just think right thoughts about him. We have to actually live like him.


This is where some people get tripped up. They think Presbyterians are all about intellectual faith, all head and no heart. That's not true. Yes, we engage our minds. But we also roll up our sleeves.


On any given Tuesday at St. John's, you might find church members tutoring kids, delivering meals to homebound seniors, advocating for better housing policies, or planning our next community event. Faith that stays comfortable in the pew isn't real faith.


Presbyterian Versus Other Christian Traditions


Let me briefly compare Presbyterian Christianity to some other Christian groups you might be familiar with:

Presbyterian vs Catholic: Catholics look to the Pope and bishops for authority. Presbyterians look to Scripture and elected elders. Catholics have seven sacraments. We have two. Catholics believe the bread and wine literally become Christ's body and blood. We believe Christ is spiritually present but not physically. Both groups love Jesus, read the Bible, and seek to follow God. The differences are real but not fundamental.


Presbyterian vs Baptist: Baptists baptize only adults who can confess faith for themselves. Presbyterians baptize infants too. Baptists practice full immersion baptism. Presbyterians usually sprinkle or pour water. Baptists give each local congregation complete autonomy. Presbyterians connect churches through regional bodies called presbyteries. Again, same Jesus, different details.


Presbyterian vs Methodist: Methodists and Presbyterians are actually pretty similar. Both emphasize grace, both value social service, both are Protestant. The main difference is that Methodists historically emphasized personal holiness and emotional conversion experiences more than Presbyterians did. We tend to be a bit more reserved in worship, a bit more intellectual in approach.


Presbyterian vs Pentecostal/Charismatic: Pentecostal and charismatic Christians emphasize spiritual gifts like speaking in tongues, prophecy, and miraculous healing. Presbyterian churches generally don't practice these gifts in worship, though we respect Christians who do. We tend toward more ordered, structured worship rather than spontaneous expressions.


The point isn't that one group is right and others are wrong. The point is that Christianity is a big family with different expressions. We're all following Jesus. We just emphasize different aspects of the faith and organize ourselves differently.


Why Presbyterian Christianity Matters in Houston


Houston is an incredibly diverse city. You can find literally any kind of church you want here. Megachurches with thousands of people. Tiny storefront churches with twenty. Formal liturgical services. Spontaneous charismatic worship. Traditional hymnody. Contemporary Christian rock.


So why choose Presbyterian? Why visit St. John's?


Here's my honest answer: Because some of you need roots more than you need options.


In a city of endless spiritual choices, Presbyterian Christianity offers a tradition that's been testing and refining its understanding of faith for five centuries. We're not making it up as we go. We're not chasing the latest spiritual trend. We're not trying to be cool or relevant.


We're trying to be faithful. We're offering worship that's intellectually honest, emotionally real, and spiritually substantive.


If you're tired of churches that feel like entertainment venues, Presbyterian worship might feel like coming home. If you're weary of spiritual shopping, trying different traditions but never staying long enough to be changed, Presbyterian commitment might be exactly what you need.


If you're looking for a church small enough that people actually know your name but rooted in a tradition bigger than any one congregation, St. John's could be your place.


We're not perfect. No church is. But we're real people trying to follow Jesus faithfully in community. We're committed to worship that honors God, to preaching that respects Scripture, to service that actually helps our neighbors.


Common Questions About Presbyterian Christianity


"Do I have to be Presbyterian to visit?" Absolutely not. Many people at St. John's didn't grow up Presbyterian. We welcome anyone sincerely seeking to know God and serve others. Come as you are.


"Will worship feel too formal or stuffy?" Some people initially find our structure unfamiliar. But most discover it's not stiff or cold. We're warm people following a thoughtful pattern. Give it a few visits before you decide.


"Can I take communion if I'm not Presbyterian?" Yes. We practice open communion. If you trust in Jesus Christ, you're welcome at the table, regardless of your denomination.


"Do Presbyterians speak in tongues?" That's not part of our typical worship tradition. We respect Christians who practice this gift, but it's not something you'll encounter at St. John's.


"How does Presbyterian Christianity relate to Reformed theology?" Presbyterian churches are part of the Reformed tradition within Protestantism. Reformed theology emphasizes God's sovereignty, salvation by grace, and the authority of Scripture. If you want to learn more, visit our Sunday service and talk with me after. I'm always happy to explain our beliefs.


An Invitation to Experience Presbyterian Christianity


So here's my invitation: Don't just read about Presbyterian Christianity. Experience it.


Visit St. John's Presbyterian Church on a Sunday morning. Sit in our sanctuary. Sing our hymns. Hear Scripture explained. Share communion with us. Meet our people.


See if this expression of Christianity speaks to you. See if the combination of thoughtful theology, structured worship, and genuine community feels like home.


We gather every Sunday at 11:00 AM at 5020 West Bellfort Avenue in Houston. Our sanctuary seats about 200, and on a full Sunday it feels genuinely full because everyone participates. Elders pray. Kids sing. We're small enough that you'll actually be known.


Presbyterian Christianity isn't better than other forms of Christianity. But it might be better for you. Some people thrive in large, contemporary services with full bands. Others need the quiet depth of traditional worship. Some people love spontaneous, emotional expression. Others prefer thoughtful reflection.


If you're someone who values both intellectual engagement and heartfelt worship, Presbyterian Christianity might fit. If you want a church where you're not anonymous, where people will know your story and walk with you through life, St. John's could be your community.


And here's the beautiful thing: We're all Christians. Whether you end up Presbyterian or Baptist or Methodist or Catholic, if you're following Jesus, you're part of the family. The question isn't which branch of Christianity is correct. The question is which branch will help you grow in faith and serve the world.


For many people in Houston, that answer is Presbyterian. For some of those people, the specific answer is St. John's.

Come find out if you're one of them.


St. John's Presbyterian Church
5020 West Bellfort Avenue
Houston, TX 77035
(713) 723-6262


Sunday Worship: 11:00 AM


We're not a different religion. We're Christians. Presbyterian Christians. And we'd love to welcome you into our community as you explore what faithful discipleship looks like in the Reformed tradition.


No perfect people required. Just honest seekers willing to be formed by a tradition older and deeper than contemporary spiritual trends.


Connect More


Perhaps this sermon will speak to you: "When God Feels Silent, as a Presbyterian: Ask, Seek, Knock."


Or, what makes our Presbyterian worship unique?


Here's another sermon that may speak to you that gives you a Presbyterian perspective on how to deal with a situation where God feels distant. It's called: "The Silence of Heaven: Seeking God When God Feels Distant."




About the Author

pastor houston, st johns presbyterian, bellaire texas church, serving since 1956, presbyterian pastor, west bellfort church

Pastor Jon has served St. John's Presbyterian Church in Houston for over a decade and is the author of 50+ books on Christian living available on Amazon. 


He is an innovator in both the community and at the church, bringing in major initiatives like the Single Parent Family Ministry housing with PCHAS, the One Hope Preschool program, and expanding the community garden that brings together church members and neighbors. 


Under his leadership, St. John's has become known for practical service that makes a real difference in the community. 


His approach is simple: "We're real people who worship and serve Jesus Christ with no frills."

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By Jon Burnham April 29, 2026
The church newsletter of St. John's Presbyterian Church in Westbury, Meyerland
By Jon Burnham April 25, 2026
St. John's Presbyterian Church in Houston welcomes you to worship!
By Jon Burnham April 22, 2026
St. John's Presbyterian Church in Houston
By Jon Burnham April 18, 2026
St. John's Presbyterian Church in Houston ~ Worship Bulletin and Annoucements
By Jon Burnham April 15, 2026
The Epistle St. John's Presbyterian Church in Houston Seventy Years on West Bellfort Dear friends, Seventy years is a long time. Longer than most of us have been alive. Long enough to watch Houston transform from a mid-sized Texas city into one of the largest and most diverse cities in the country. Long enough to see whole neighborhoods rise, change, and find new life. St. John's Presbyterian Church has been here through all of it. Since 1956, this congregation has worshiped at 5020 West Bellfort Avenue. Think about that for a moment. The Astrodome had not even been built yet when the first members of St. John's gathered to sing hymns and hear Scripture. Houston was a different world, and a small group of Presbyterians planted a church in southwest Houston because they believed this neighborhood needed a community of faith that would stay. They were right. And they stayed. I did not arrive until 2007, so I cannot claim credit for those first decades. When I came, the congregation handed me something they had been building for fifty-one years. That is a humbling thing to receive. You walk into a story that was already going long before you showed up. What struck me most in those early years was not the building or the programs. It was the people who had been here for decades and still showed up every Sunday like it was the first time they had discovered something worth getting out of bed for. That kind of faithfulness is rare. You do not manufacture it. It grows slowly, year after year, in the soil of shared prayer and shared loss and shared meals and shared mission. Seventy years of names and faces. People who showed up with mops and buckets after Harvey flooded this building, who worked until the Education Building was clean and dry and whole again, and who then turned around and opened those same doors to One Hope Preschool. Families who buried loved ones from this sanctuary and then came back the following Sunday because they needed to be with their people. Young parents who brought infants for baptism and then watched those same children come back as adults, sometimes with infants of their own. Choir members who sang the same hymns for forty years and somehow found new meaning in them every time. The community garden did not exist in 1956. The columbarium was not there. The partnership with Lulwanda Children's Home in Uganda would have seemed impossible. The PCHAS Single Parent Family Ministry on our campus was not yet a dream anyone had dreamed. But the spirit behind all of those things was already present. The belief that the church exists to serve people, and that serving people in the name of Christ changes both the server and the served. That belief has carried this congregation through good years and hard ones. I want to be honest about something. Celebrating seventy years could easily become a kind of self-congratulation. We did it! Look at us! And I understand the temptation. Reaching this milestone as a small congregation in a city full of large and well-funded churches is genuinely something to be grateful for. But I think the truer celebration is this: God was faithful. Generation after generation of people at St. John's said yes when they could have said no. They gave money when money was tight. They showed up to committees and Session meetings and fellowship dinners when they were tired. They welcomed strangers. They prayed for each other by name. God worked through all of that ordinary faithfulness to keep this church alive and keep it useful. That is what is worth celebrating. What do the next ten years look like? Or the next seventy? I do not know, and I suspect that is fine. The people who started this congregation in 1956 probably could not have imagined the church we are today. They just tried to be faithful with what they had in front of them. So that is still the job. Worship well on Sunday mornings. Study Scripture together. Tend the garden. Bring food to Braes Interfaith Ministries. Sit with people who are grieving. Welcome whoever walks through the door. If we do those things, we will probably still be here in 2056. And some pastor who is not yet born will walk into this congregation and receive what you have been building, and they will feel the same weight of gratitude I felt in 2007. God willing, they will also feel the same joy. Seventy years is a long time. And we are just getting started. Peace, Pastor Jon Burnham Welcome New Members: New Faces, Familiar Grace Last night, our Session had the joy of receiving new members into the life of St. John's. We welcomed the Layman family: Zach, Jessica, and their two little ones, Mark and Eric. They did not stumble upon us by accident. They came looking specifically for a congregation that takes the gospel seriously enough to live it out even when it costs something. Some of you will remember the opposition that arose when PCHAS brought its Single Parent Family Ministry to our campus. The Laymans heard about that, and it told them something about who we are. They will be scheduling baptisms for their boys here soon, and we look forward to that celebration. We also received the Rev. Valerie Bell into our fellowship. Valerie is an honorably retired PC(USA) pastor who now makes her home in Meyerland. She has served congregations in Florida and Arkansas, and she brings with her real gifts for teaching and pastoral care among others. As a minister, Valerie will be joining our presbytery rather than our membership roll, but in every way that matters she is one of us, sharing her time and her talents alongside the rest of the congregation. We are glad she is here. Receiving new members during the month of our 70th anniversary year feels like exactly the right kind of gift. God is not finished with St. John's yet. Welcome home, Laymans. Welcome home, Valerie. We will share their photos in the Epistle as soon as they become available. A Word of Celebration We received a wonderful note this week from Loic, grandson of our own Leonie. He wanted the St. John's family to know that he is graduating this May 15th with a 4.0 GPA and an Associate's Degree of Science in Chemistry. After that, he plans to pursue a bachelor's degree in Energy and Environmental Engineering at a four-year school in Canada. He wrote to say thank you, and his words were simple and sincere: "Y'all really made it easier for me." Pastor Jon replied: "A 4.0 in Chemistry does not just happen. That takes discipline, long nights, and a steady kind of determination. And now you are stepping into Energy and Environmental Engineering, which tells me you are not only thinking about your future, but about the future of the world God has given us to care for. We are proud of you, Loic. Truly." Please keep Loic in your prayers as he heads into this exciting next chapter. He carries St. John's love with him all the way to Canada. Tomorrow: PCHAS Luncheon at Lakeside Country Club The annual PCHAS luncheon is tomorrow, Wednesday, April 16th, at noon. It will be held at Lakeside Country Club, 100 Wilcrest Drive, Houston, 77042. The theme this year is "Hope Outlives Hardship." The one-hour program will share updates on the many services PCHAS provides across Texas, Louisiana, and Missouri, with real stories of lives changed. It is a heartwarming event and always worth the time. We are glad to say that 20 people from St. John's are registered and ready to go. St. John's has had deep ties to PCHAS for many years, and especially since partnering with their Single Parent Program right here on our campus beginning in 2012. There will be an opportunity to give toward this ministry if you feel led to do so, but it is not required. If you are registered and have questions about tomorrow, please call or text Shirley at 713-598-0818; or Ann at 713-240-2690. Men of the Church The next meeting of the Men of the Church will be 15 April at 6:30 PM in the Session Room. Come for a time of study and service projects that benefit the church. Fellowship and Caring Committee Meeting this Sunday after worship Our Caring Committee will be gathering near the Session Room for a meeting on Sunday, April 19 , immediately following our worship service. We invite all members to join us as we reflect on our recent outreach efforts and discuss new ways to support and uplift our church family in the coming months. Your heart for service and your thoughtful ideas are what make this ministry so vital. We look forward to seeing you there! Myrtis McPhail Scholarship Attention all high school seniors, undergraduate college, and/or technical/trade school students! St. John’s is once again ready to accept applications to the Myrtis McPhail Scholarship Fund . These funds are available to any church member or relative of a church member who will be enrolled full time in undergraduate college or a technical/trade school in the Fall of 2026. You must reapply for the scholarship each year, and you may apply for a maximum of 5 years. Applications are available by email request to Kathy Barnhill ( jabarnhill@comcast.net ) or Mindi Stanley ( mstanley@bcm.edu ) or click on this link: Applications will be accepted until May 15, 2026 and we hope to distribute funds to recipients in June. The Scholarship Fund also is open for donations! If anyone would like to donate, please indicate the McPhail Scholarship Fund on a check or via Zelle. McPhail Hall Temporarily Closed This past Sunday, we discovered that several ceiling tiles had fallen in McPhail Hall. Unfortunately, additional tiles fell later in the week. While we have cleaned the area and secured the immediate surroundings, our top priority is the safety of our congregation and guests. Therefore, all events scheduled in McPhail Hall are canceled until further notice while we investigate the cause and ensure the space is fully safe for use. We apologize for the inconvenience and will provide updates as soon as we know more. Healing Hearts: A Ministry of Care and Encouragement Healing Hearts will meet in the church office building in the Prayer Room of the church office building. Healing Hearts is a grief and bereavement support group. Led by Lisa Sparaco , a Licensed Clinical Social Worker and member of our church, this group will provide a safe and faith-filled space for sharing stories, receiving encouragement, and walking together through seasons of loss. This is not a therapy group, but a ministry of care and prayer for all who grieve. Next Meeting for Healing Hearts Wednesday, April 8, 7:00 - 8:00 PM in the Prayer Room Monday, April 27, 11:00 AM to Noon Prayer List Becky Crawford, hip surgery Glen Risley, recovering from surgery Scenacia Jones family Jessica Ivete Robles, a friend of Alice Rubio, awaits a kidney transplant Family of Sue Benn Tom Edmondson, recovering from spinal surgery Holly Darr, health concerns Kelsey Wiltz, health concerns Madalyn Rodgers, Kathleen Captain's sister Joe Sanford, Scott Moore and Alice Rubio St. Johns College Students Raina Bailey and the families in our PCHAS homes One Hope Preschool families and staff Caring for One Another in Prayer Our prayer list is a vital way we support one another, lifting up joys and concerns before God. From time to time, we update the list to ensure it reflects current needs. If a name has been removed and you would like it added back, please reply to this email and let us know who they are and why you would like them included. Your input helps us pray more intentionally and stay connected to those in need of ongoing support. Thank you for being part of this ministry of care and intercession. Happy Birthday Jo Ann Golden (April 8) Winnie Georgiev (April 9) Samuel Okwudiri (April 9) Emmanuel Okwudiri (April 9) Pat Ragan (April 12) Tom Edmonsond (April 13) Allen Barnhill (April 14) Austin Gorby (April 14) Jenny Pennycuff (April 17) Kennedy Muanza (April 24) Jon Burnham (April 26) Wednesday, April 15 6:30 pm Men’s Group, Session Room Thursday, April 16 12:00 pm PCHAS Luncheon. Church Office Closed 5:00 pm Exercise Class in Building 2 7:00 pm Maundy Thursday service, Sanctuary Sunday, April 19, Third Sunday of Easter 9:30 am Sunday School for Adults, Systematic Theology, Session Room 11:00 am Worship Service, live in sanctuary and on Facebook, Rev. Herron preaching 12:00 pm Brunch, hosted by the Worship Committee 1:30 pm Book Study, Zoom 3:30 pm Girl Scouts in Session Room and Room 203. Wed, April 15, Men’s Group Thurs, April 16, 12 pm, PCHAS Luncheon; Church Office Closed Sun, April 19, Fellowship and Caring Committee meeting after worship Mon, April 27, Healing Hearts, 11 am Thurs, April 30, BIM Gala (tentative date) Church Calendar Online For other dates, see St. John’s Calendar online: https://www.stjohnspresby.org/events/ 2026 Session Members and Roles Elders on the Session: Class of 2026 Ann Hardy: Finance and Stewardship Michael Bisase: Buildings and Grounds Jan Herbert: Christian Education Elders on the Session: Class of 2027 Lynne Parsons Austin: Worship Omar Ayah: Faith in Action Marie Kutz: Personnel and Administration Elders on the Session: Class of 2028 Mary Gaber: Christian Education Peter Sparaco: Faith and Action Tina Liljedahl Jump: Fellowship and Caring Other Session Leaders and Support Staff Jon Burnham: Moderator of Session Lynne Parsons Austin: Clerk to Session Tad Mulder: Church Treasurer Tap Here to leave a Google Review for St. John's Presbyterian Church 👉 Tap here to leave a review: [ Direct Google Review Link ] (Currently 4.9 stars from 37 reviews – thank you!) Sermon Series Resurrection Disruptions Most Easter sermons make a promise that is hard to keep on Monday morning. Death is defeated. Christ has risen. And then the diagnosis is still real. The grief hasn't lifted. The loss is still just there. This Easter season we are going to be honest about that tension. The series is called "Resurrection Disruptions: When Death Gets Interrupted," and it runs from Easter Sunday through the Day of Pentecost. Eight weeks, eight stories of God showing up for people who weren't ready, weren't expecting it, and probably weren't facing the right direction when it happened. Ezekiel in a valley of dry bones. Thomas with his hand near a wound. Disciples huddled behind a locked door. Each week is a disruption story. Each week the resurrection interrupts something that looked finished. The arc moves from the disorientation of early Easter morning all the way to Pentecost, from silence to fire, from a sealed tomb to a wide open street. If you have ever wondered whether faith has anything real to say to people who are actually suffering, these eight weeks are for you. Bring someone who is carrying something heavy this spring. We'll start at an empty tomb and see where the risen Christ takes us from there.
By Jon Burnham April 9, 2026
St. John's Presbyterian Church in Houston
By Jon Burnham April 8, 2026
The Epistle for April 8, 2026 Resurrection Disruptions: The Easter Season Is Just Getting Started Dear friends, Last Sunday's Easter worship was one of those mornings you carry home with you. The sanctuary was full, familiar faces and a few new ones, and when we gathered around the Lord's table there was room for everyone who came forward. That is always the best kind of full. We sang, we prayed, we heard again the staggering news that the tomb was empty and the women ran to tell someone. I am still thinking about that image, those women running. As we move now through the weeks of the Easter season, I hope you will keep coming back. The story does not end at the empty tomb. In some ways, it is just getting started. This Sunday continues our new series, "Resurrection Disruptions: When Death Gets Interrupted." The title came to me because Easter keeps disrupting things. Grief gets disrupted. Despair gets disrupted. Our careful plans for how life should go get disrupted. Each week we will look at one of those disruptions through the lens of both the Old Testament and the New. We started last week with "The Stone Rolls Away," reading Ezekiel's valley of dry bones alongside Matthew's account of the women at the tomb. Both passages ask the same question, really. Can these bones live? And both give the same impossible, wonderful answer. The series will run all the way through Pentecost and Trinity Sunday. We have some rich ground to cover. Thomas and his wounds. Elijah sitting under a broom tree, done with everything, then getting fed by angels and told to get back up. The road to Emmaus, where two heartbroken disciples walk miles with a stranger and only recognize him when he breaks the bread. These are not tidy stories. They are full of confusion and doubt and grief. I think that is why they still feel true. On April 26 we will spend time with Psalm 23 and the Good Shepherd passage from John, which feels right for spring. And on May 10, the Sixth Sunday of Easter, we will look at Paul standing in Athens trying to explain the unknown God to a crowd who had never heard of Jesus. I find that passage quietly hilarious and deeply moving at the same time. We land on Pentecost Sunday, May 24, with "Fire-Tongued Gospel," reading Isaiah's burning coal alongside Acts 2. Then we close the season on Trinity Sunday, May 31, with "God Beyond Our Boxes." Genesis 1 and the Great Commission together. I have a feeling that one will give us more to talk about than we can finish in an hour. I hope you will join us for as many of these Sundays as you can. Peace, Pastor Jon Burnham Friends United Lunch April 9, 11 am In the room next to the Session Room Join the Friends United group for lunch and a fun game of bingo on Tuesday, April 9th, at 11 am. Please bring your own sack lunch, while dessert and drinks will be happily provided. Come ready to enjoy good company, food, and friendly competition as we play bingo and celebrate together. Myrtis McPhail Scholarship Attention all high school seniors, undergraduate college, and/or technical/trade school students! St. John’s is once again ready to accept applications to the Myrtis McPhail Scholarship Fund . These funds are available to any church member or relative of a church member who will be enrolled full time in undergraduate college or a technical/trade school in the Fall of 2026. You must reapply for the scholarship each year, and you may apply for a maximum of 5 years. Applications are available by email request to Kathy Barnhill ( jabarnhill@comcast.net ) or Mindi Stanley ( mstanley@bcm.edu ) or click on this link: Applications will be accepted until May 15, 2026 and we hope to distribute funds to recipients in June. The Scholarship Fund also is open for donations! If anyone would like to donate, please indicate the McPhail Scholarship Fund on a check or via Zelle. Christian Eduction Committee Meeting this Sunday after worship Following our worship service this Sunday, the Christian Education Committee will gather in the Session Room to continue our planning for the church's learning ministries. We invite all committee members to join us as we discuss upcoming curriculum and new opportunities for spiritual growth across all age groups. Your presence and insights are deeply valued as we work together to nurture the faith of our congregation! Fellowship and Caring Committee Meeting this Sunday after worship Our Caring Committee will be gathering near the Session Room for a meeting on Sunday, April 19 , immediately following our worship service. We invite all members to join us as we reflect on our recent outreach efforts and discuss new ways to support and uplift our church family in the coming months. Your heart for service and your thoughtful ideas are what make this ministry so vital. We look forward to seeing you there! Protect Your Mail, Prep Your Taxes by Dan Herron Things to think about, safety in our modern age Incoming U S mail This has your name and address of course. Some advertising items have a small place to “SCAN HERE” for quick service. Be careful when throwing this envelope/document into the trash. If anyone gets that SCAN HERE Spot, guess what they might have. Your scanned name and address, of course. And, from that SCAN spot, perhaps your credit card information! So, to be absolutely safe, tear up and destroy these scannable spots! Some have a computer virus. Tear up your name and address also. Then, no one can use those items to do any fraud on you. Mailing checks Do not use the blue mailbox outside the US post office to mail your check payments and tax documents. Look up stories about how mail thieves actually remove mail from inside that kind of mailbox. The thieves know we mail checks this season because of income tax payments. Tax Season 2026 for 2025 returns This article is for Tax Education only. Income tax time is here! Be sure to take care of your 2025 income tax forms very soon. If you cannot file by the due date be sure to file for an extension. Look up this topic on the internet at IRS.Gov for the due dates to file and other information about filing. Do not put this off. Be sure to be on time. Get help if you need it, but don’t wait. These days you can usually print any form you need from IRS.GOV. It is also nearly time for the 1040-ES which is for an early estimate of your 2026 taxes. The form 1040-ES is used for this quarterly payment to the IRS. They send 4 of these forms to me early in the year. I guess this is to be sure I don’t miss paying taxes before the tax season. Check online for the due date of 1040 ES form and payment. Dan Herron Thank you from Scenasia and Family Thank you St. John's family. As Moses grew weary, Aaron and Hur placed a stone for him to sit on and held his hands steady-- I didn't know how tired I was until you all were there!! The thoughtfulness gave me something I didnt know I needed-help!! But sometimes you don't know where you need the help-- as you guys just said let us - I surrendered. Thank you simply does not express the gratitude of the thoughtfulness of everything. I didn't have to worry about what to cook/when to cook/when to eat- it was just there!! Y'all thought of us-- including Nyjel's special dietary needs, "extras", salad w dressing, cornbread, crackers, cookies and meals enough for a couple days! More importantly I appreciate the hugs and prayers. We are honored to be loved by y'all. Much love, Scenacia, Nnaji & Nyjel Faith in Action: A Few Important Updates I want to share a few quick updates and invitations as we continue our work alongside our neighbors through Braes Interfaith Ministries. BIM Gala Tickets Coming Soon You should be receiving tickets soon from Eloy for BIM’s annual gala. The event is tentatively scheduled for Thursday, April 30, though we are still waiting on final confirmation. As soon as the date is set, we will pass that along. Faith in Action Committee Meeting We will gather for a Faith in Action Committee meeting following worship on Sunday, April 12. If you have a heart for mission or simply want to learn more about how we serve our community, you are welcome to join us. Supporting BIM in a Critical Season Many of BIM’s programs are facing funding challenges right now, which makes this moment especially important. We invite you to consider a cash donation to support their work in advance of the gala or shortly after. Checks can be made payable to Braes Interfaith Ministries, with “BIM Gala Fundraiser” noted in the memo line. This is one of those quiet ways the church makes a real difference. No spotlight. Just steady care for people who need it. Thank you for being part of that work. PCHAS Luncheon - Register Now - Details Below "Hope Outlives Hardship" is the theme for the annual luncheon for PCHAS at the Lakeside Country Club (100 Wilcrest Dr., 77042). The April 16th one-hour noon-time program provides an update on the many services PCHAS provides in Texas, Louisiana and Missouri through heartwarming examples of how lives are changed. St. John’s ties to PCHAS go back many years, but especially since partnering with their Single Parent Program beginning in 2012. Do you feel a sense of pride when someone in the community comments or asks about these duplexes? We hope to fill (at least) two tables (of 10-11 guests) for this annual major fundraising event here in Houston for PCHAS. Special diets are available on request. Yes, you will have an opportunity to donate toward this amazing ministry should you so choose, but it is not required! Many who have attended in the past have already received email or snail-mail notifications. More information will be in the Epistles and announcements during worship services through mid-April. Those interested in attending are asked to register either directly to Marla Endieveri at the PCHS Office here in N.W. Houston(832-241-5921), or on-line (marla.endieveri@pchas.org); by calling or texting Shirley at 713-598-0818; by calling or texting Ann Hardy at 713-240-2690; or by leaving a message at the church office (713-723-6262) no later than April 11. Please consider attending this special time of fellowship and hope! McPhail Hall Temporarily Closed This past Sunday, we discovered that several ceiling tiles had fallen in McPhail Hall. Unfortunately, additional tiles fell later in the week. While we have cleaned the area and secured the immediate surroundings, our top priority is the safety of our congregation and guests. Therefore, all events scheduled in McPhail Hall are canceled until further notice while we investigate the cause and ensure the space is fully safe for use. We apologize for the inconvenience and will provide updates as soon as we know more. Men of the Church The next meeting of the Men of the Church will be 15 April at 6:30 PM in the Session Room. Come for a time of study and service projects that benefit the church. St. John's Snapshots Photos by Ken Krueger Vivian and her grandaughter, Kathleen. Photo by Virginia Krueger Healing Hearts: A Ministry of Care and Encouragement Healing Hearts will meet in the church office building in the Prayer Room of the church office building. Healing Hearts is a grief and bereavement support group. Led by Lisa Sparaco , a Licensed Clinical Social Worker and member of our church, this group will provide a safe and faith-filled space for sharing stories, receiving encouragement, and walking together through seasons of loss. This is not a therapy group, but a ministry of care and prayer for all who grieve. Next Meeting for Healing Hearts Wednesday, April 8, 7:00 - 8:00 PM in the Prayer Room Monday, April 27, 11:00 AM to Noon Prayer List With hearts united in hope, we lift these names into the healing presence of God. Glen Risley, recovering from surgery Scenacia Jones family Jessica Ivete Robles, a friend of Alice Rubio, awaits a kidney transplant Gerry Jump, Brazos Towers Family of Sue Benn Tom Edmondson, recovering from spinal surgery Holly Darr, health concerns Kelsey Wiltz, health concerns Glen Risley, health concerns Madalyn Rodgers, Kathleen Captain's sister Joe Sanford, Scott Moore and Alice Rubio St. Johns College Students Raina Bailey and the families in our PCHAS homes One Hope Preschool families and staff Caring for One Another in Prayer Our prayer list is a vital way we support one another, lifting up joys and concerns before God. From time to time, we update the list to ensure it reflects current needs. If a name has been removed and you would like it added back, please reply to this email and let us know who they are and why you would like them included. Your input helps us pray more intentionally and stay connected to those in need of ongoing support. Thank you for being part of this ministry of care and intercession. Prayer List Update – How Can We Pray for You? As part of our commitment to intentional and meaningful prayer, we periodically refresh our prayer list to ensure we are staying connected with those who need support. If you or someone you previously requested would like to remain on the prayer list, or if you have a new name to add, please reply to this email and let us know. We are grateful for the opportunity to pray with and for you. Happy Birthday Jo Ann Golden (April 8) Winnie Georgiev (April 9) Samuel Okwudiri (April 9) Emmanuel Okwudiri (April 9) Pat Ragan (April 12) Tom Edmonsond (April 13) Allen Barnhill (April 14) Austin Gorby (April 14) Jenny Pennycuff (April 17) Kennedy Muanza (April 24) Jon Burnham (April 26) Wednesday, April 8 7:00 pm Healing Hearts, Prayer Room, Room 202 Thursday, April 9 11:00 am Friends United, Room 203 and Session Room 5:00 pm Exercise Class in Building 2 7:00 pm Maundy Thursday service, Sanctuary Saturday, April 11 9:30 am Daisy Troop, Room 203 Sunday, April 12, Second Sunday of Easter 9:30 am Sunday School for Adults, Session Room 11:00 am Worship Service, live in sanctuary and on Facebook 12:00 pm CE Committee and Fellowship and Caring Committee Meetings 1:30 pm Book Study on Zoom 4:30 pm Pack 8 Meeting, Exercise Room Coming Events Sun, April 12, CE and Fellowship and Caring Committees meet Tue, April 14, Session Meeting Wed, April 15, Men’s Group Thurs, April 16, 12 pm, PCHAS Luncheon; Church Office Closed Sun, April 19, Brunch, Worship Committee Host Mon, April 27, Healing Hearts, 11 am Thurs, April 30, BIM Gala (tentative date) Church Calendar Online For other dates, see St. John’s Calendar online: https://www.stjohnspresby.org/events/ 2026 Session Members and Roles Elders on the Session: Class of 2026 Ann Hardy: Finance and Stewardship Michael Bisase: Buildings and Grounds Jan Herbert: Christian Education Elders on the Session: Class of 2027 Lynne Parsons Austin: Worship Omar Ayah: Faith in Action Marie Kutz: Personnel and Administration Elders on the Session: Class of 2028 Mary Gaber: Christian Education Peter Sparaco: Faith and Action Tina Liljedahl Jump: Fellowship and Caring Other Session Leaders and Support Staff Jon Burnham: Moderator of Session Lynne Parsons Austin: Clerk to Session Tad Mulder: Church Treasurer Tap Here to leave a Google Review for St. John's Presbyterian Church 👉 Tap here to leave a review: [ Direct Google Review Link ] (Currently 4.9 stars from 37 reviews – thank you!) Resurrection Disruptions New Sermon Series Starts Easter Sunday Most Easter sermons make a promise the people in the pews already know is hard to keep. Death is defeated. Christ has risen. Hallelujah. And then Monday arrives. And the diagnosis is still real. The grief hasn't lifted. The loss is still just... there. This Easter season at St. John's, we're going to be honest about that tension. The sermon series is called "Resurrection Disruption: When Death Gets Interrupted," and the central claim is this: Easter Sunday announces something more specific than "death lost." What it announces is that death got interrupted. Mid-sentence. A clause inserted into the story that changes everything after it, without pretending the story was never started. That might sound like a small distinction. I promise it isn't. We're going to spend eight Sundays together, from Easter all the way through Pentecost in mid-May, tracing this pattern across both the Old and New Testaments. Ezekiel in a valley of dry bones. Thomas with his hand near a wound. Three men walking out of a furnace not smelling of smoke. Disciples huddled in a locked room while the risen Jesus stands in the middle of them. Each week is a disruption story. Each week God shows up for someone who wasn't ready, wasn't expecting it, and probably wasn't facing the right direction when it happened. That pattern matters. Because most of us, if we're honest, aren't facing the right direction most of the time either. The series runs Easter Sunday through the Day of Pentecost, and the eight messages follow the shape of grief in a way that surprised even me when I saw it. We start with the disorientation of early Easter morning and end, eight weeks later, with the disciples finally breathing out what God breathed into them. The arc moves from receiving to sending, from silence to fire, from a sealed tomb to a wide open street. If you've ever wondered whether faith has anything real to say to people who are actually suffering, these eight weeks are going to give you a lot to hold onto. Bring a friend. Bring whoever in your life is carrying something heavy this spring. We'll start where we always start, at an empty tomb, and see where the risen Christ takes us from there. Church Office Hours and Contact Info Our church office is normally open Monday through Thursday, from 10:00 a.m. to noon. Pastor Jon is typically available on Monday and Tuesday mornings, Alvina Hamilton serves on Wednesdays, and Linda Herron staffs the office on Thursdays. If you need assistance outside of these hours, please don’t hesitate to call us at 713-723-6262. To submit updates for the Prayer List or contributions to the Wednesday Epistle , kindly email Pastor Jon directly . Put "Epistle" in the subject line to make sure it gets in the Epistle. Church Website and Calendar Online Our church website: https://www.stjohnspresby.org/ For dates, times, and events, see St. John’s Calendar online: https://www.stjohnspresby.org/events/ Email Pastor Jon to request an addition to the church calendar or to add an event or article to The Epistle. St. John's Bible Study & Faith Formation Groups 1. Sunday Morning Adult Bible Study Time: Sundays at 9:30 AM Location: In-person at church Description: Adult class that focuses on systematic theology. Open to visitors without needing to fill out forms or commit immediately. 2. Sunday Afternoon Zoom Study Time: Sundays at 1:30 PM Location: Zoom (virtual) Description: Tackles books and topics requiring sustained attention. Recently studied "The Way of Discernment" by Steve Doughty. Focuses on deep questions about following God's will, spiritual discernment, and making faithful life decisions. Small group format where everyone participates. 3. Tuesday Afternoon Women's Study Time: Tuesday afternoons at 1:30 PM Location: Zoom (virtual) Description: Long-standing women's group studying Christian books, praying together, and supporting each other through life's challenges. Not a stereotypical "ladies' Bible study" but rather women asking tough questions and wanting faith that matters in real life. Mothers, professionals, retirees, and caregivers dealing with aging parents, marriages, careers, and health issues. 4. Men's Group (Wednesday Evening) Time: Every other Wednesday at 6:30 PM (one hour or so) Location: In-person at church Description: Men dig into Scripture with focus and energy. They also hold each other accountable and pray for each other's struggles. They work on practical service projects such as upgrading lights are also on the agenda. Designed to respect men's time and intelligence. 5. Children's Bible Study Time: Sundays at 11:00 AM (during worship service) Location: Church office building Description: Age-appropriate Bible study for children that helps them engage with Scripture at their level. Not childcare but actual faith development that takes children seriously while allowing parents to focus on worship. Exercise & Wellness Groups 6. Stay Young, Stay Strong Time: Tuesdays and Thursdays, 5:00-6:00 PM Location: Room 209, Building 2 Description: Strength training class based on Miriam E. Nelson's book "Strong Women Stay Slim." Weights provided. Fellowship Groups 7. St John's Friends United (Older Adults Group) Time: Monthly luncheons (contact office for schedule) Location: Various Description: Group for older adults featuring trips and monthly luncheons with programs and meals. To join any of these groups, contact: Phone: 713-723-6262 Email: office.sjpc@gmail.com The church is located at 5020 West Bellfort Avenue, Houston, TX 77035 
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